223692

Springer, Dordrecht

2019

203 Pages

ISBN 978-3-030-02151-1

History of Computing

Exploring the early digital

Edited by

Thomas Haigh

Changes in the present challenge us to reinterpret the past, but historians have not yet come to grips with the convergence of computing, media, and communications technology. Today these things are inextricably intertwined, in technologies such as the smartphone and internet, in convergent industries, and in social practices. Yet they remain three distinct historical subfields, tilled by different groups of scholars using different tools. We often call this conglomeration “the digital,” recognizing its deep connection to the technology of digital computing. Unfortunately,interdisciplinary studies of digital practices, digital methods, or digital humanities have rarely been informed by deep engagement with the history of computing.Contributors to this volume have come together to reexamine an apparently familiar era in the history of computing through new lenses, exploring early digital computing and engineering practice as digital phenomena rather than as engines of mathematics and logic. Most focus on the period 1945 to 1960, the era in which the first electronic digital computers were created and the computer industry began to develop. Because digitality is first and foremost a way of reading objects and encoding information within them, we are foregrounding topics that have until now been viewed as peripheral in the history of computing: betting odds calculators, card file systems, program and data storage, programmable calculators, and digital circuit design practices. Reconceptualizing the “history of computing” as study of the “early digital” decenters the stored program computer, repositioning it as one of many digital technologies.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-02152-8

Full citation:

Haigh, T. (ed) (2019). Exploring the early digital, Springer, Dordrecht.

Table of Contents

Introducing the early digital

Haigh Thomas

1-18

Open Access Link
Forgotten machines

Swade Doron

41-68

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The eniac display

Thielmann Tristan

101-116

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The media of programming

Priestley Mark; Haigh Thomas

135-158

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Foregrounding the background

Aspray William; Loughnane Christopher

159-178

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"The man with a micro-calculator"

Tatarchenko Ksenia

179-200

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